Pairs of small colliding galaxies may seed future stars

In a new study, astronomers show how gas expelled in the merger of two small galaxies can linger across vast distances for billions of years, where it may eventually feed gas to more massive galaxies to make new stars. The Large Magellanic Cloud and the Small Magellanic Cloud pictured above are a pair of dwarf galaxies that were in the process of merging when they fell into the Milky Way. Their gas is expected to replenish half of the gas consumed by our galaxy as it forms new stars. Credit: S. Brunier/European Southern Observatory

A pair of dwarf galaxies closely circling the Milky Way, the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, were in the throes of merging into one when they fell into our galaxy. The duo is thought to hold enough gas to replenish half of the Milky Way's supply of star-making fuel, and now, a study in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society offers new insights into how galaxies like ours are able to capture this gas so easily.

"You have this enormous reserve of star formation fuel sitting there ready to be stripped by another system," says study coauthor Mary Putman, an astronomer at Columbia University.

Home to millions of stars, dwarf galaxies are outshined by bigger galaxies like the Milky Way with hundreds to thousands of times more stars. But what dwarf galaxies lack in brightness, they make up for in their sheer abundance of star-making fuel. The hydrogen gas swirling through the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds and dwarf galaxies like them are thought to play a key role in birthing new stars and other small galaxies.

To explore the star-making potential of dwarf galaxy pairs, a research team led by then-Columbia graduate student Sarah Pearson turned to a remote pair—NGC 4490 and NGC 4485—23 million light years away. Similar to the Large Magellanic Cloud, NGC 4490 is several times larger than its companion galaxy. But its isolated location allowed the researchers to simulate its eventual merger with NGC 4485 without interference from the Milky Way's gravitational pull.

In their simulations, they watched the bigger galaxy, NGC 4490, peel off gas from its smaller sibling, a gravitational effect due to their lopsided difference in size. As the pair circled ever closer to each other, the smaller galaxy's tail of gas was swept farther and farther away, a finding that supports a study earlier this year that fingerprinted the gas streaming from the Magellanic Clouds into the Milky Way as belonging to the Small Magellanic Cloud.

Researchers simulated the collision of a pair of distant dwarf galaxies to understand how their gas gets dispersed in the merger process. In the above simulation, the larger galaxy pulls gas off the smaller galaxy, creating a vast tail of gas that can last for billions of years. Credit: Sarah Pearson/Columbia University

Long after NGC 4490 collided with its smaller companion and merged into one in the researchers' simulation, their gas footprint continue to expand, the researchers found. In five billion years, they found, the pair's gas tails would extend over a distance of 1 million light years, nearly twice its current length. "After 5 billion years, 10 percent of the gas envelope still resides more than 260,000 light years from the merged remnant, suggesting it takes a very long time before all the gas falls back to the merged remnant, " says Pearson, who is now a fellow at the Flatiron Institute's Center for Computational Astrophysics.

When the researchers compared their results to real-world observations of NGC 4490/4485 made by telescope, the results matched, indicating their model was accurate.

Their findings are also consistent with what astronomers know about the recycling of gas in the universe. As gas clouds grow more extended, the looser the gas becomes, thus making it easier for a bigger galaxy to come along and gobble it up. The simulation suggests that this dispersal process has helped the Milky Way efficiently strip gas from the Small Magellanic Cloud, and that this sort of gas-transfer may be fairly common elsewhere in the universe.

"Our study suggests that similar dwarf pairs exist out there," says Pearson. "Because their gas is so extended, if they fall into something like the Milky Way, their gas is easily shed."

The study further suggests that declining gas density on the outskirts of colliding dwarf galaxies makes it hard for new stars to form, a conclusion matched by observations. The researchers plan to continue studying other pairs of dwarf galaxy collisions to refine their model.

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4 comments

Such a description of a merger, and one could almost hear the screams of fear and horror of the Life Forms who lived on the planets that were affected, as their atmospheres were ripped away and the gravity could not hold them from floating out into Space.

@SEU - your imagination is unfortunately not attached whatsoever to reality. The truth is that the spaces between stars combined with their relatively tiny gravitational cross section (compared to average separation) makes actual stellar interactions close enough to affect the planetary systems around them fantastically rare. The only exceptions of course are in those clusters and areas of the merge where stars systems are unusually dense. But even so, probably 80-90% of the stars involved in the merge never get closer than 1/2 lyr or so.

Actually, on second thought, I would like to see the simulation results to see what the effects would be. I suspect your incorrect, but the merges and stellar interactions might just be much more widespread than I believe.

That nagging doubt, dismissal of the calamitous eventI like your approach Parsec, realistic dismissal of the calamitous event not having the foggiest chance of taking place, but S_E_U realistic imaginative scenario weaving its magic spell on your vivid imagination such that your tenuous grip on your planet is now such that even simulation results will not dispel that nagging doubt as your planet slips weightlessly in ever increasing circles.